Major camp was Hasho, [Basuo] on the west coast of the island.
Hainan is off the south coast of China.
Most prisoners came from Ambon
Island.

Following information supplied by Tom Pledger,
[Corp, Australian Army, 2/12th Field Ambulance, attached to the
2/21st Inf Btn, Ambon], letters of 23 March 2000 and 9 Jul 2000.

263 Australian and 245 Dutch Prisoners (508 total) from Ambon
were taken to port of Hasho, now called BASUO, a smaller city
adjacent to or part of the area about 5 miles west of DONGFANG
City on the west coast of Hainan. [Ship was the Taikio
[Taiko]Maru, departed 10 Oct 1942, 508 men, arrived
4 Nov 1942. Endured three days in typhoon. No deaths reported]Note: Major Singlaub (rescue team) reported there were
260 Australian and 267 Dutch at time of rescue with 80 Aussie
and 91 Dutch in hospital. 67 Aussie and over 100 Dutch had perished.
Data not verified by the Center for Research]

Camp Description: I did not
have to go out on the work parties, but was kept very busy in
the camp, which consisted of 3 huts, 220 feet by 35 feet. No.
1 hut housed the Aussies, No. 2 the Dutch and No. 3 was the hospital.
[see Pledger War Diary
PDF]

Camp Labor:Our main trouble
was starvation, especially for the work parties as they had to
march out about 7 AM and work all day and back about 6 PM.

The first big job was building a ramp about 3/4 mile long
from nothing up to about 60 feet high to carry about 6 sets of
railway lines. [Fast
loading Map of port showing ramp] This was so that the iron
ore they were bring in by rail from the island could be loaded
direct onto the ships. The guards were very cruel and beat the
chaps with iron bars, pieces of thick timber, rifles and many
had to be carried back to camp by their mates. Then we took over
and did what we could for them, as we had no supplies, and the
Japs gave us very, very little. [later jobs were mostly road
building]

The worst was when they got dysentery or beri-beri or malaria,
because the starvation diet they had no resistance to fight the
disease and many a chap I have held his hand and talked to him
so he would not die alone.

Rescue: 29% (156) of the
530 had perished. When rescued, the POWs were taken by train
to the southern port of Sama (now SANYA) where the Americans
had established an airfield. The train was attacked and derailed
by Chinese guerillas and had to return to the camp. The next
day, the train departed and made it to Sama without trouble.
[letter of Tom Pledger, 23 Mar 2000] The medics stayed at the
prison camp to nurse the sick and to bring the Chinese slaves
back to health. A week later, the staff went to Sama aboard some
fishing vessels. "Most of the well chaps left by destroyer
for home, but the medical staff stayed with the sick and were
picked up by the English hospital ship "Gerusalem"
at Sama and taken to Hong Kong and there transferred to the British
Aircraft Carrier "Striker" and returned via
Manila, and Manus Island to Sydney."

Related Stories:Tom
Pledger- excellent PDF on his experiences on Ambon
and Hainan. Well illustrated.Ambon Island -
Story of the atrocities committed on Ambon and Sado Islands by
the Japanese in a post-war interview.Rescue
Mission at war's end by COL John K. Singlaub